PAGE TEN A REMEDY FOR Philadelphia Man Tells How 'He Treated a Severe Case With Vinol and the Success- ful Result. y also a doctor, not get an; as of ha sm | git curadhis worst colds, time received ents | Mr. A. J. Balfour te talk of "Lord aden. Mandod, Drogeit, Kings- PRATT'S ANIMAL 'AND We carry a full line of the following (Remedies, Which you cannot afford 'to ibe without if you keep horses or poul- ofr -- y: Animal Regulator--Poultry Reégulas gtor--Lice Killer--White Diarrhoca Remedy -- Cholefa Reémeédy--Germ-a- ithol Disinfectant, + Ison why such is so--it is no mere quibble Cement. Blocks, Silla, cks, Flower Vases, Tile, i Per ete. We also mig] Semen. 0 ye ates given for ds of Work: pd 3 oe Zan sup; Grave Vaults, i I'mented chorus.' Well, there is no + [Such 'person, : 'Brandenburg Blectors; FICTION ABOUT NAMES A LOT OF COMMON TITLES HAVE NO BASIS IN FAJT. Suck Job as That of Crown Prince of Germany--REven Balfour at an Unveiling Referred to Lord Bacon Instead of Lord Vernlam. 5. exploded theory, we are told, dies hard, and fictions, once pro- moted into facts, are almost assured of life everlasting. It is the inevit- able outcome of that faint of stark: stupidity, as Dr. Johnson would bave| sald, which is to be found in every! man; the shade of mental fog that! enables makers of reference books ig; perpetuate the most ' fodlish 'errors and entitlés the deluded to believe! what he wishes to believe. This kipd of establishéd and endowed bad habit bas accomplished much in' re- gard to persbnal names. It was re- sponsible, for instance, for allowing Bacon" when unveiling the statue of Sir Frahels Bacon, Lord Verulam, at Gray's Inn some time ago; responsi ble, too, for Bir Robert Allison's re- cen; lapse when hé alluded to the "King of Belgium," meaning, prob- ably, the King of the Belgians---an entirely different affair. There is, however, & much worse specimen going the rounds just now, for though, like "Lord Bacon," quite an aged absurdity, it has prospered, as many wrong things have, through the war. A double-headed fréak, made specially in the Hohenzollérn Vaterland for free Importation' to Merry England, It is no other than "Emperor of Germany" -- 'Crown Prince of Germany." This impossi- ble thing springs up Hke fungus everywhere. Even so accurate #nd well-informed a writer as Mr, H. G. Wells has it, in his excellent pam- phlet on "The' War and Soclalism," The authorities of Westminster Ab- bey at the last coronation there la- belled a chair with the fiction "Crown Prince pf Germany." And in the recently-published letters which passed between King George and M. Poincare last July our For- beign Office credits' His Majesty with alluding to "the Emperors of Russia and of Germany." The popular press, the illustrated handbook, and the cipematograph make an 'aug- and 'there Néver has been, so far ¢s a Prussian king is gongerned, Further, there is a rea- over the form of a name. yr of Germany was a title assumed by Rudolph, Couit of Haps- burg, 'in 1273. y the Pragmatic Sanction of 1439 title, then held by Albert I11., was confined in per- pefinity to the House of Austria. This "suc came to an end in the person of Francis II, who, af: ter his crushing defeat by Nay oon, ) T resigned. his title . Em Ee ee Nok oat of Emperor of Austria, 1808. At the same time 20h row from the leader- 'Austria 1 {ship of EN an Stafes, and | Prussia, once a mere fief of Poland. stepped into the position. at || movement, however, was gradual, entailing many other changes, and eration completed its dream by the King of Prussia Desoming German Emperor. then, and continyed to im= agine Vo his dying day, that he had marck, who was very far from be: Ie Sus Bias, Ooh Bera {an mandate, German TOF, | became law. The reason' be vious, the Emperors of Germany be. ing the representatives of the an. Empire ble to. the cendant of moreover, | Emperor of" meant, as in Russia it still means, sovereign lord absolute | BLES fp fn. Pn in other terri , while and, as a faet, termed), for his ere 'pftem : styled The German Emparor Is Not the Km-| peror of Germany and There Is No! Wa vanso, the it was, pot till 1871 'that the new | Confed iam I., a very ordinary person, | who had greatmess thrust upon him, | a right to the older title; but Bis-| [2 {elent of the 'West, the Holy | Roman Empire, a position impossi-. THE DAILY .. BOOMERANG AEROPLANE, i b {Two Frenchmen Have Invented a Novel Flying Machine, A flying 'wechine that is neither aeroplane, balloon, helicopter, wor orpithopter is mow being tried. It is called a gyropter, and is the in- vention of A. Papin and D. Ronilly, its principle #8 taken from a study of 'tHe movemeénts of a boomerang | and of-the fall and Bight of the seeds o the sycamore. This last is 7 one- bladed screw progeller turnirg about {an imaginary axis and balanced by { the 'weight of the seed grains so that | it falls slowly like a parachute. | The gyropter is made up of a long | body, with a head and a tall, turning | on an axis situated one-third of the | distance from the head to the tail The peat for the aviator at this céns tre of rotation remains immovable in the middie of the great boom- erang. "The thing is not unlike a great k of which is turned at a right angle and ends in a hole, 1t is built of wood, strengthened by interior braces, and covered inside and but with canvas. Jt has neither front ner rear. It i8 a body turning upon itself, a pro- peller-blade thrown into the air and given equilibrium by part of another blade placed there to bhaldnce the weight of the motor. This motor works a turbine which sends a gfream of air at tremendous speed into the interior of the apparatus, whence it issues from the curved end of the tall and by its pressure on the surrounding air sets up a rotatory motion in'the whole machine. The motor ig in thé head. It is a rotatory motor, with nine cylinders, tnaking 1,200 revolutions a minute. The air rushes through a wide tube surrounding the aviator's seat.' The latter is in a circhlar box om ball- bearings. The air penetrates a sort of antenna made of wood and Tre» volving 'about its longitudinal axis ai the will of the pilot. This epds in a ctirved pipe through which the air rushes with foree enough to pre- vent the car from partaking in the whirling motion of the rest of the machine. THis antetina is the rud« der of the apparatus. Under thé apparatus is a lems- shaped float, which acts as a cushion fu descending and as a hub on which th> machine revolves when started on the ground. The air rushes around the "ma< chine and Is expelled from the end of the tall with a speed of 100 metres a second, aboiit seven cubic inches being discharged every sec- ond. The surface of the apparatus is twelve square metres, and it weighs, pilot inclufied, 500 kilograms, When the motor Is tilled at an angle to the plane of revolution of the whole, gyroscopic action makes the 'gyropter rise. There are two opposite gyroscopic motions, one of the motor, the other of the whole machine, and these insure stability under the 'guidance of the pilot, who can, of course, change at will the angle their planes make to each other.~--Johanneshurg Sunday Times. Leet Amazon Natives' "Wireless." the Juamaar region of the Ama-~ h Soattves use a crude system of telegtaphy, which, It is js been § on for smartly | WHIG, FRIDAY, Bary & Practical pin Dress Making Lerrons "r= MAY 28, 1915. Prépared Especially For This Newspaper by Pictorial Review ATTIRE FOR THE SUMMER GIRL Ld rarer RUA pi {0 \\ 1 1 A Li Sum frock " : dort ih ro S08 nAAes wath feta to match the 'dots,' a : this season. Now close the nd and b "10, lower edge Sr i : Ts : centers. even, large "0" perforation at | under-arm seam. If made high neck. | sew standing collar to neck edge as | notched; if made with V-shaped neck. | sew flare collar to neck edge, center- | backs even and bring large "0" per- | foration to corresponding perforation | in front. It desired, gather front and, back on crosslines of small "o" pers | foratlons and stitch upper edge of band | over gathers, small "o" perforation in | band at under-arm seam, Finish lower | of band with a stralght gathered | e hes about 1 Inch wide. Turn under '* lower edge of sleeve on double "oo" | perforations apd 'stitch, easing in any | fullness. If desired with sleeve puff. | close seam as notched tg large "0" per- | foration. Gather on crogsiines of small | "o" perforations, draw gathers to the | required size 'and stitCh tape under. neath, Adjust to position underneath folded edge of sléeve. notches and seams even. Now close the skirt-seams, finish the | efges above for opening. Hem the | lower 'edge and close back séams of | bands, 16 be adjusted on the Skirt, hav. | Ing the center-front and seams éven. | Btitch upper edges along cross-lines of single small "0" perforations. Ir de- | and 43, Ak of waist over #lay, cen- ters even, small "0" perforation at uns der-arm seam. Large "0" perforation in girdle indi- cates upper edge; gather betwoen dous ble perforations and adjust 'bon- ing. the desired length under gathers. Fish he ruffles with a narrow band of the taffeta. : Bizes 14 to 20 years. Price, 15 cepts, lages, especially in the Bernese Ober- land, there still exists ancient and HL iaeiaiey is Li il APPEAL OF THE CHURCH. Calls on Nation to Meet Whatever . Demands Are Made, London, May 27 ~The Archbishops of Canterbury and York have issued the following joint pastoral ' letter which is to be read in all churches June 6: "After ten months of war we spe 'more clearly than at first the great- ness and severity of the ordeéal which is putting the 'spirit of our nation to the test. "The "spirit arrayed against us threatens the very foundation of ¢ivi- liged order in Christendom. It wields Nn immense and ruthless power. It can only be decisively rolied back if we, for our part, concentrate the pire holds, 2 unstinted response Whatever deman of service 'or sacrifice "thé Govern- ment decides to make. The great war, righteously waged, calls out that spirit of willing sacrifice with a nsity which noth- opens and 1 bd reo A) ta ess and in our country's can ere 1s Nothing too dear or too sa- cred to be offered. "YC "God has 80 taught us. Let us obey by what we give, and by what we are. May His will be done." 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